I
itsonly3wires
just completed an installation condition report on a commercial property...
I've come across a situation where there are two phases present in one light switch and not sure how to handle it. Here is the background:
Building has been subdivided and present wiring dates to 1980. Previously the building was occupied by two separate tenants. One a drama school on ground and first floor and the other a (flat) private dwelling above on the second floor.
The drama school has since taken over the lease of the flat and the two have historically shared a single stairwell.
Building has 3 phases. One phase serves a ground floor retail premesis adjoining the property. One serves the drama school the third phase serves the former flat.
What I have obsevered is a lighting circuit serving the stairwell is wired from the second floor flat's consumer unit. It is switched from two locations, one location in the flat, the other in the drama school.
The switch on the drama schools landing also houses switches for two other lighting circuits that are wired from the drama schools consumer unit.
So we have a location where one switch unit (3 gang, 2 way switch) that has two different phases from two separate CU's.
My question is this...
Should that switch be labelled with "more than one source of isolation" and "415V"?
Should that switch be there at all?
I am in a position to put into place a best practice solution so I'd be interested to know what everyone thinks the best solution might be.
Labelling the switch probably makes this comply but I am curious as to whether a switch rated to 240V is rated to switch 240V or rated to insulate 240V and therefore my 415V phase to phase is outside specification.
I've come across a situation where there are two phases present in one light switch and not sure how to handle it. Here is the background:
Building has been subdivided and present wiring dates to 1980. Previously the building was occupied by two separate tenants. One a drama school on ground and first floor and the other a (flat) private dwelling above on the second floor.
The drama school has since taken over the lease of the flat and the two have historically shared a single stairwell.
Building has 3 phases. One phase serves a ground floor retail premesis adjoining the property. One serves the drama school the third phase serves the former flat.
What I have obsevered is a lighting circuit serving the stairwell is wired from the second floor flat's consumer unit. It is switched from two locations, one location in the flat, the other in the drama school.
The switch on the drama schools landing also houses switches for two other lighting circuits that are wired from the drama schools consumer unit.
So we have a location where one switch unit (3 gang, 2 way switch) that has two different phases from two separate CU's.
My question is this...
Should that switch be labelled with "more than one source of isolation" and "415V"?
Should that switch be there at all?
I am in a position to put into place a best practice solution so I'd be interested to know what everyone thinks the best solution might be.
Labelling the switch probably makes this comply but I am curious as to whether a switch rated to 240V is rated to switch 240V or rated to insulate 240V and therefore my 415V phase to phase is outside specification.